The Human Gut Microbiome: Ecology and Recent Evolutionary Changes
University of Nebraska–Lincoln · Cornell University
Abstract
The human gastrointestinal tract is divided into sections, allowing digestion and nutrient absorption in the proximal region to be separate from the vast microbial populations in the large intestine, thereby reducing conflict between host and microbes. In the distinct habitats of the gut, environmental filtering and competitive exclusion between microbes are the driving factors shaping microbial diversity, and stochastic factors during colonization history and in situ evolution are likely to introduce intersubject variability. Adaptive strategies of microbes with different niches are genomically encoded: Specialists have smaller genomes than generalists, and microbes with environmental reservoirs have large…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 13.75
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 112
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Generalist and specialist species
- Ecological niche
- Microbiome
- Ecology
- Genome
- Population
- Competitive exclusion
- Reduced inequalities